Title: The Protoplasmic Venture
1Chapter 6
2Humans cant live without seeking to describe
and explain the universe. (Sir Isaiah Berlin)
3Four Great Etiological Questions
- What is the origin of life?
- What is the origin of human beings?
- What is the origin of matter?
- What is the origin of the universe?
4Biochemical Evolution
- Alexander Oparin (1922)
- J.B.S. Haldane (1928)
- Stanley Miller (1953)
- First laboratory synthesis of a complete
mammalian gene (1975) - Cyril Ponnamperuma
- George Wald (1957)
5The Beginning of Life on Earth
- When did life begin on the planet Earth?
- Fossil records indicate that life developed
sometime between 4.5 billion years ago and 3.5
billion years ago - During that billion-year period, some wonderful
and incredible events were taking place
6Earths Life-Forms An Inventory
- Hot thin soup
- 1.5 million species of living organisms
- 10,000 new species added annually
- Estimated 10 million species of organisms exist
- Estimated 10 billion species produced by
evolution on Earth since planet began
7Biogenetic Theories
- Panspermia
- Spontaneous generation
- Hylozoism
- Creationism
- Vitalism
8Can Life Be Defined?
- What is life?
- Self-replication
- Mutability
- Motility
- Metabolism
- Growth
- Irritability
- Dynamic Equilibrium
9Evolution as a Field Theory
- Darwins genius 1) his ability to bring a
synoptic mind to these disparate elements and fit
them all together 2) his meticulous gathering of
scientific data to support his theory
10Three Basic Processes of evolution
- The laws of heredity
- Mutations produced by changes in the DNA code
- The dynamics of natural selection
11Evolution Based on Five Observations
- Species produce like species
- There is an enormous excess of reproductive
material - Individual variations in genetic characteristics
- Competition for food and living room
- Environmental niches are dynamic
12Evolution and Meaning
- The Doctrine of Progress
- Nietzsche, The main goal of history is to produce
a man who has such greatness that he would be a
new species - Bergson, Vital Life-force
13Evolution and Progress
- Natural Selection is an Arms Race
- Evolutionary Convergence
- Epigenetics
14A Case of Convergence The Eye
- Represents a new worldview for understanding all
living things - Exactly the same structures, functions, and
behavioral mechanisms exist everywhere throughout
the animal and plant kingdoms - The eye as an example of convergence
- Eyes have continued to evolve along independent
lines of development - No individual organism should be seen as a stage
on the way up to something else
15Suffering and the Arms Race
- Terrible but true, the suffering among wild
animals is so appalling that sensitive souls
would best not contemplate it. --Richard Dawkins - What is the meaning of human suffering?
- Traditional Problem of Evil
16Philosophic Implications
- Do we understand how life evolves?
- What does it mean to say this?
- Chemical biogenesis as first-magnitude field
theory - Ethical considerations
- Cosmic implications
17Philosophic Problems
- Irreversibility
- Convergence
18Charles DarwinThe Grandest Synthesis
- Darwin saw the key to the puzzle the mechanism
of evolvement is the struggle for survival and
the survival of the fittest. - Under the perpetual threat of starvation and
annihilation in the harsh environment, all
species of life on Earth continually struggle for
survival, and only the fittest survive.
19Reflections
- What do you think are the most far-reaching
philosophic implications of the biochemical
theory of the origin of life? Do you feel a sense
of relief that foundations have been laid for an
empirical answer to this question?
20Humans
- This chapter describes the evolutionary context
for reflecting on the human situation and
suggests that evolution has now taken a new and
unpredictable turn.
21The Sculptor-Gods
- Pottery as a universal skill
- Shards of pottery have been found wherever people
have lived - Clay figurines were made for fun
- Creation myths based on sculpting clay
- Examples Tu, Titi and Tame Ewe-speaking tribes
of Togo, West Africa Toradjas of the Celebes
Hebrew account of creation Shilluks of White Nile
22The Story of Human Origins
- Homo Sapiens wise humans
- Homo Habilis
- Australopithecus (Lucy)
- Homo erectus
23Update Human Origins
- Sahelanthropus tchadensis
- Australopithecus afarensis
- Australopithecus africanus
- Ardipithecus ramidus
- Homo ergaster
- Homo floresiensis
- Homo habilis
- Homo erectus
- Homo sapien
24Still Trying to Define Human
- Physical characteristics
- Ethical feelings
- Esthetic feelings
- Religious feelings
- Soul-essence (psyche)
25The Killer-Ape Theory
- Killing on principleinherited or learned?
- Leakey and Lorenz and the killer-ape theory
- Montagus dispute of the theory
- How do we humans differ from our animal kin
regarding feelings of aggression? - What distinguishes humans from other animals?
26The Immense Journey
- Rapid progress in science/technology has
radically altered the selective function of the
environment - Destruction of our natural environment
27Soren KierkegaardThat Individual
- Now called Existentialism, it is a philosophy of
the experiencing human self, and Kierkegaards
life is the story of one mans search for what it
means to be human - The thing is to understand myselfto see what
God really wishes me to do the thing is to find
a truth which is true for me, to find the idea
for which I can live and die.
28Reflections
- Make an attempt to define human. How would you
describe essential man? What are some of the
problems we must face in developing a definition?
29Earth
- This chapter is a meditation on humankinds
relationship to other living creatures on Earth
and to the Earth itself. It raises the question
of who has a right to control and exploit other
species.
30Our Place in the Scheme of Things
- General evolution
- Human evolution
- Cultural evolution
- 3 stages 1) Parent-child relationship 2) man as
conqueror 3) protective feeling toward nature
31An Ecospheric Ethic
- Who has a right to do what to whom and why?
- The notion of right
- Professor Sessions assessment
- Rachel Carsons attack
- St. Francis of Assisi
- Professor Charles Hartshornes Ultimate Value
- Professor John Cobbs intrinsic criteria
32Coexistence - In Life Death
- Physical/ecological relationships
- Psychological/ecological relationships
- Why do we kill for pleasure?
- Human sacrifice
- Anthropomorphizing animal kin 1) we cant help
it 2) we want other creatures to like us
33No Man Is An Island
- Each is a part of the whole, subject to the same
physical forces that move the atoms and the
planets - We are part of an awesome protoplasmic venture
34Albert SchweitzerReverence for Life
- Reverence for life In that principle my life
has found a firm footing and a clear path to
follow.
35Reflections
- Think about Schweitzers Reverence for Life a
concept he believed to be the realistic answer
to the realistic question of how man and the
world are related to each other. How do you feel
about this all-inclusive ethic?
36Future
- This chapter describes several future scenarios,
both optimistic and pessimistic
37The Theoretical Life
- Practical life (praktikos bios) short-range
goals - (versus the)
- Theoretical life (theoretikos bios) long-range
goals
38Research Into the Future
- Utopias and anti-Utopias
- Futures research 1) forecasting techniques 2)
world catastrophe 3) world systems 4) past
frameworks obsolete - What is the goal of futures research?
39Mankind at the Turning Point
- A world consciousness
- A new ethic in the use of material resources
- An attitude toward nature must be developed based
on harmony rather than conquest - A sense of identification with future generations
40The Futurists the Future
- No single world-picture, although there is
remarkable agreement on many points - Short-range futurists
- Middle-range futurists
- Long-range futurists
- Alvin Tofflers Future Shock
- Arthur C. Clarke
41A New Kind of Realism
- Based on a more objective assessment of empirical
data, this realism attempts to project a variety
of scenarios in the hope we can, in time, face
them and solve them
42The Players
- Sir Fred Hoyle
- Edward O. Wilson
- Robert T. McCall
- Ray Bradbury
43Many Futures A Common Vision
- Todays world has come unglued, unraveled
- There is a pressing need for a sense of global
identity and a shared vision of the future a
reason to exist - A shared vision of our common future is therefore
enormously important
44Friedrich NietzscheThe Glory of Becoming Human
- Nietzsche built on a theory of evolution to
reinterpret the history of the human race and to
lay foundations for his grand vision of the
future of mankind - Will to power as the basic drive
- Ubermensch Superman
45The Nietzsche Myth
- Myth Nietzsche is a bigoted anti-Semite
- Myth Nietzsche is an advocate of Darwins
Evolutionary Theory - Only after Nietzsches death was his philosophy
appropriated as official ideology of Nazi
apologetics - The Germans saw themselves as the master race
46Reflections
- Recall the statement that opens this chapter
That we create the past and can also create
alternative futures and that we need both past
and future to see ourselves in perspective. How
much value is there in this way of looking at
ourselves and our place in time?